| Literature DB >> 2515878 |
M C McCarthy1, K C Hyams, A el-Tigani el-Hag, M A el-Dabi, M el-Sadig el-Tayeb, I O Khalid, J F George, N T Constantine, J N Woody.
Abstract
A seroepidemiologic survey was conducted among 773 male soldiers living in five urban locations in Sudan to study the prevalence of and risk factors for HIV-1 and hepatitis B transmission. Twenty-eight per cent of the study population were born and raised in southern Sudan, an area bordering Kenya, Zaire and Uganda, whilst 72% of the study subjects were from northern Sudan. Seventy-eight per cent of the study population had serologic evidence of past hepatitis B infection, and 13 soldiers were confirmed positive for HIV-1 antibody. All 13 HIV-positive soldiers had recently been deployed in southern Sudan. Multivariate analysis indicated an association between living in southern Sudan and both hepatitis B (odds ratio 8.2) and HIV-1 infection (odds ratio 14). Additionally, sexual relations with prostitutes (odds ratio 1.5) and medical injections for schistosomiasis (odds ratio 2.72) were independent predictors of hepatitis B markers in this military population. The findings of this study suggest that sexual promiscuity is a risk factor for hepatitis B transmission in Sudan. They also indicate one possible route for the spread of HIV-1 from central to northern Africa.Entities:
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Year: 1989 PMID: 2515878 DOI: 10.1097/00002030-198911000-00006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS ISSN: 0269-9370 Impact factor: 4.177